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Methane Exhalation Can Monitor the Microcirculatory Changes of the Intestinal Mucosa in a Large Animal Model of Hemorrhage and Fluid Resuscitation

Background: Internal hemorrhage is a medical emergency, which requires immediate causal therapy, but the recognition may be difficult. The reactive changes of the mesenteric circulation may be part of the earliest hemodynamic responses to bleeding. Methane is present in the luminal atmosphere; thus,...

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Autores principales: Bársony, Anett, Vida, Noémi, Gajda, Ámos, Rutai, Attila, Mohácsi, Árpád, Szabó, Anna, Boros, Mihály, Varga, Gabriella, Érces, Dániel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7642453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33195312
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2020.567260
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author Bársony, Anett
Vida, Noémi
Gajda, Ámos
Rutai, Attila
Mohácsi, Árpád
Szabó, Anna
Boros, Mihály
Varga, Gabriella
Érces, Dániel
author_facet Bársony, Anett
Vida, Noémi
Gajda, Ámos
Rutai, Attila
Mohácsi, Árpád
Szabó, Anna
Boros, Mihály
Varga, Gabriella
Érces, Dániel
author_sort Bársony, Anett
collection PubMed
description Background: Internal hemorrhage is a medical emergency, which requires immediate causal therapy, but the recognition may be difficult. The reactive changes of the mesenteric circulation may be part of the earliest hemodynamic responses to bleeding. Methane is present in the luminal atmosphere; thus, we hypothesized that it can track the intestinal circulatory changes, induced by hemorrhage, non-invasively. Our goal was to validate and compare the sensitivity of this method with an established technique using sublingual microcirculatory monitoring in a large animal model of controlled, graded hemorrhage and the early phase of following fluid resuscitation. Materials and Methods: The experiments were performed on anesthetized, ventilated Vietnamese minipigs (approval number: V/148/2013; n = 6). The animals were gradually bled seven times consecutively of 5% of their estimated blood volume (BV) each, followed by gradual fluid resuscitation with colloid (hydroxyethyl starch; 5% of the estimated BV/dose) until 80 mmHg mean arterial pressure was achieved. After each step, macrohemodynamic parameters were recorded, and exhaled methane level was monitored continuously with a custom-built photoacoustic laser-spectroscopy unit. The microcirculation of the sublingual area, ileal serosa, and mucosa was examined by intravital videomicroscopy (Cytocam-IDF, Braedius). Results: Mesenteric perfusion was significantly reduced by a 5% blood loss, whereas microperfusion in the oral cavity deteriorated after a 25% loss. A statistically significant correlation was found between exhaled methane levels, superior mesenteric artery flow (r = 0.93), or microcirculatory changes in the ileal serosa (ρ = 0.78) and mucosa (r = 0.77). After resuscitation, the ileal mucosal microcirculation increased rapidly [De Backer score (DBS): 2.36 ± 0.42 vs. 8.6 ± 2.1 mm(−1)], whereas serosal perfusion changed gradually and with a lower amplitude (DBS: 2.51 ± 0.48 vs. 5.73 ± 0.75). Sublingual perfusion correlated with mucosal (r = 0.74) and serosal (r = 0.66) mesenteric microperfusion during the hemorrhage phase but not during the resuscitation phase. Conclusion: Detection of exhaled methane levels is of diagnostic significance during experimental hemorrhage as it indicates blood loss earlier than sublingual microcirculatory changes and in the early phase of fluid resuscitation, the exhaled methane values change in association with the mesenteric perfusion and the microcirculation of the ileum.
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spelling pubmed-76424532020-11-13 Methane Exhalation Can Monitor the Microcirculatory Changes of the Intestinal Mucosa in a Large Animal Model of Hemorrhage and Fluid Resuscitation Bársony, Anett Vida, Noémi Gajda, Ámos Rutai, Attila Mohácsi, Árpád Szabó, Anna Boros, Mihály Varga, Gabriella Érces, Dániel Front Med (Lausanne) Medicine Background: Internal hemorrhage is a medical emergency, which requires immediate causal therapy, but the recognition may be difficult. The reactive changes of the mesenteric circulation may be part of the earliest hemodynamic responses to bleeding. Methane is present in the luminal atmosphere; thus, we hypothesized that it can track the intestinal circulatory changes, induced by hemorrhage, non-invasively. Our goal was to validate and compare the sensitivity of this method with an established technique using sublingual microcirculatory monitoring in a large animal model of controlled, graded hemorrhage and the early phase of following fluid resuscitation. Materials and Methods: The experiments were performed on anesthetized, ventilated Vietnamese minipigs (approval number: V/148/2013; n = 6). The animals were gradually bled seven times consecutively of 5% of their estimated blood volume (BV) each, followed by gradual fluid resuscitation with colloid (hydroxyethyl starch; 5% of the estimated BV/dose) until 80 mmHg mean arterial pressure was achieved. After each step, macrohemodynamic parameters were recorded, and exhaled methane level was monitored continuously with a custom-built photoacoustic laser-spectroscopy unit. The microcirculation of the sublingual area, ileal serosa, and mucosa was examined by intravital videomicroscopy (Cytocam-IDF, Braedius). Results: Mesenteric perfusion was significantly reduced by a 5% blood loss, whereas microperfusion in the oral cavity deteriorated after a 25% loss. A statistically significant correlation was found between exhaled methane levels, superior mesenteric artery flow (r = 0.93), or microcirculatory changes in the ileal serosa (ρ = 0.78) and mucosa (r = 0.77). After resuscitation, the ileal mucosal microcirculation increased rapidly [De Backer score (DBS): 2.36 ± 0.42 vs. 8.6 ± 2.1 mm(−1)], whereas serosal perfusion changed gradually and with a lower amplitude (DBS: 2.51 ± 0.48 vs. 5.73 ± 0.75). Sublingual perfusion correlated with mucosal (r = 0.74) and serosal (r = 0.66) mesenteric microperfusion during the hemorrhage phase but not during the resuscitation phase. Conclusion: Detection of exhaled methane levels is of diagnostic significance during experimental hemorrhage as it indicates blood loss earlier than sublingual microcirculatory changes and in the early phase of fluid resuscitation, the exhaled methane values change in association with the mesenteric perfusion and the microcirculation of the ileum. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-10-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7642453/ /pubmed/33195312 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2020.567260 Text en Copyright © 2020 Bársony, Vida, Gajda, Rutai, Mohácsi, Szabó, Boros, Varga and Érces. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Medicine
Bársony, Anett
Vida, Noémi
Gajda, Ámos
Rutai, Attila
Mohácsi, Árpád
Szabó, Anna
Boros, Mihály
Varga, Gabriella
Érces, Dániel
Methane Exhalation Can Monitor the Microcirculatory Changes of the Intestinal Mucosa in a Large Animal Model of Hemorrhage and Fluid Resuscitation
title Methane Exhalation Can Monitor the Microcirculatory Changes of the Intestinal Mucosa in a Large Animal Model of Hemorrhage and Fluid Resuscitation
title_full Methane Exhalation Can Monitor the Microcirculatory Changes of the Intestinal Mucosa in a Large Animal Model of Hemorrhage and Fluid Resuscitation
title_fullStr Methane Exhalation Can Monitor the Microcirculatory Changes of the Intestinal Mucosa in a Large Animal Model of Hemorrhage and Fluid Resuscitation
title_full_unstemmed Methane Exhalation Can Monitor the Microcirculatory Changes of the Intestinal Mucosa in a Large Animal Model of Hemorrhage and Fluid Resuscitation
title_short Methane Exhalation Can Monitor the Microcirculatory Changes of the Intestinal Mucosa in a Large Animal Model of Hemorrhage and Fluid Resuscitation
title_sort methane exhalation can monitor the microcirculatory changes of the intestinal mucosa in a large animal model of hemorrhage and fluid resuscitation
topic Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7642453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33195312
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2020.567260
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